Chicago Sun-Times

HOUSE AGAIN FAILS TO OVERRIDE GO V’S VETO OF ANTI-‘ RIGHT- TO- WORK’BILL

- BY TINA SFONDELES Political Reporter Email: tsfondeles@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ TinaSfon

SPRINGFIEL­D— Calling it “a victory for the people,” Gov. Bruce Rauner notched another win Tuesday in his battle against organized labor, as the Illinois House failed in its second attempt to override his veto of a bill that would prohibit local municipali­ties from sidesteppi­ng unions by enacting “right- to- work” zones.

The House vote was 70 to 39, one short of the 71 needed to override the governor’s veto. It was a virtual mirror of the House’s attempt two weeks ago, when the override failed by a 70- 42 vote.

In an effort to win GOP votes, Democrats introduced a separate bill to remove a controvers­ial portion of the measure that provided a criminal penalty to local government­s that enact right towork. That “trailer bill” passed the House Tuesday, 73 to 38.

And despite the second override of the right- to- work bill, the Illinois Senate plans to also vote on that trailer bill to get Rauner on record with another veto.

But it wasn’t enough to win over Republican­s for the override, which had already passed the state Senate by a 42- 13 vote.

A key point in Rauner’s “Turnaround Agenda,” right towork essentiall­y allows people to work in union jobs without paying union dues. Rauner has argued that without it, local municipali­ties are denied flexibilit­y, resulting in fewer jobs, slower economic growth and higher taxes.

The measure that failed Tuesday would have prohibited local units of government from institutin­g “right towork” ordinances. The bill was pushed after the village of Lincolnshi­re in 2015 enacted such an ordinance, which unions challenged in court. A federal district court agreed with the unions that local right- to- work ordinances are pre- empted by the National Labor Relations Act, which allows states to pass right- towork laws but doesn’t allow local units of government to do so.

“In a victory for the people, the House of Representa­tives today kept the door open to stronger job growth in Illinois,” Rauner said in a statement Tuesday.

“Courageous House lawmakers joined together to make Illinois more competitiv­e so local communitie­s can continue to decide how to make their economies stronger, help their businesses grow and give individual workers the freedom to support a union as they choose.”

 ?? SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Gov. Bruce Rauner
SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO Gov. Bruce Rauner
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